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Posts Tagged ‘Connecticut’


CT: Republican Enters AG Race after Sister-in-Law Drops Out

From Courant.com:

Republican Ross Garber, a well-known attorney, is now running for attorney general.

Garber, who defended the office of Gov. John G. Rowland during the impeachment inquiry in 2004, had stayed out of the race this year because his sister-in-law, Democrat Susan Bysiewicz, was in the race.

Garber, who ran previously for state treasurer in 2002 against Democrat Denise Nappier, took a shot at the incumbent, Richard Blumenthal.

“Connecticut needs an attorney general who will vigorously and diligently represent the state and its citizens, and who will do so without grandstanding or self-promotion. I hope to be that attorney general,” Garber said in a statement. “As a lawyer who has spent his career representing individuals and businesses in their most important cases, I will be ready to do the job on day one.”

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CT: Democrat AG Under Fire; Lied about Serving in Vietnam

From the New York Times:

“We have learned something important since the days that I served in Vietnam,” Mr. Blumenthal said to the group gathered in Norwalk in March 2008. “And you exemplify it. Whatever we think about the war, whatever we call it — Afghanistan or Iraq — we owe our military men and women unconditional support.”

There was one problem: Mr. Blumenthal, a Democrat now running for the United States Senate, never served in Vietnam. He obtained at least five military deferments from 1965 to 1970 and took repeated steps that enabled him to avoid going to war, according to records.

The deferments allowed Mr. Blumenthal to complete his studies at Harvard; pursue a graduate fellowship in England; serve as a special assistant to The Washington Post’s publisher, Katharine Graham; and ultimately take a job in the Nixon White House.

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CT: Democrat’s Massive Database May Violate Law

From the New Haven Register:

The large database compiled by Secretary of the State Susan Bysiewicz, which is the subject of a whistleblower complaint, appears to violate a statute that forbids disclosing the home addresses of public safety and court personnel.

A review of the 36,000 names kept by her office includes more than 750 firefighters, as well as a handful of police, at least two correction officers, one high-level prosecutor and two public defenders, whose home addresses are also listed.

Sec. 1-217 of state statutes forbids any public agency from disclosing, under the Freedom of Information Act, the residential addresses of judges, firefighters, sworn members of a police department, an employee of the Department of Correction, an attorney who represents the state in a criminal prosecution, public defenders and employees in the judicial branch, among others.

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CT: Court to Hear Appeal on Democrat’s Eligibility Next Week

From the Courant.com:

In lightning-quick fashion, the state Supreme Court has agreed to hear an appeal of a judge’s ruling that Secretary of the State Susan Bysiewicz is legally qualified to continue her run for attorney general.

The high court set oral arguments on the case for Tuesday, and ordered lawyers on both sides to submit briefs Friday, an extraordinarily fast schedule that suggests the court might intend to rule before the Democratic nominating convention May 21-22.

Bysiewicz’s candidacy has been clouded by debate over a state law that requires the attorney general to have engaged in the “active practice” of law in the state for at least 10 years. Bysiewicz was in private practice for less than six years, but maintains that her duties as secretary of the state for the past 11 years satisfy the legal requirement. Critics maintain that her work has been no different from that performed by her non-lawyer predecessors and does not amount to “active practice.”

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CT: GOP Appeals Secretary of State AG Race Case

From the Associated Press:

The Connecticut Republican Party has filed an appeal, challenging a superior court judge’s decision last week that found Secretary of the State Susan Bysiewicz (BYE’-suh-witts) legally qualified to hold the office of state attorney general.

State GOP Chairman Chris Healy says the party filed the appeal on Tuesday.

He says Judge Michael Sheldon’s ruling that Bysiewicz has actively practiced law for at least 10 years is “precedent-setting” and should be reviewed.

Bysiewicz’s lawyers argued that her six years in private practice and 11 years as secretary of the state should count toward the 10-year requirement. Bysiewicz had sought the legal ruling.

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CT: Democrat State Rep Drops out of AG Race

From the Associated Press:

New Haven state Rep. Cameron Staples says he’s dropping out of the race for Connecticut attorney general.

Staples said Tuesday he does not believe he can win the Democratic nomination at the party’s May 22 convention, even though he says he has sufficient delegate support to wage a primary.

With Staples’ exit from the race, that leaves Secretary the State Susan Bysiewicz (BYE’-suh-witts) and former Senate Majority Leader George Jepsen vying for the party’s nod.

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CT: GOP Prods AG on Democrat Secretary of State Investigation

From Courant.com:

The election-year saga of Secretary of the State Susan Bysiewicz didn’t end with her victory in Superior Court last week: A judge said she’s eligible to run for state attorney general — but now, Republican State Chairman Chris Healy wants to know why current Attorney General Richard Blumenthal is taking so long to finish an ongoing investigation of Bysiewicz, a fellow Democrat.

And, in case you thought this was dying down, Blumenthal threw an intriguing new element into his response: There are new and unspecified allegations in a case that involves the Bysiewicz campaign’s use of a controversial database created by her taxpayer-funded office.

Blumenthal said his office “is reviewing all of the whistle-blower allegations made against the Secretary of the State, including some received very recently.”

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CT: Judge Says Democrat Secretary of State is Eligible for AG Run

From courant.com:

A Superior Court judge ruled Wednesday that Secretary of the State Susan Bysiewicz is eligible to run for state attorney general.

Judge Michael R. Sheldon’s ruling sends Bysiewicz into the May 21-22 state Democratic nominating convention without the cloud of legal doubts that had been following her since she declared her candidacy for attorney general in January.

The doubts centered on whether Bysiewicz met the requirements of a state statute that says Connecticut’s attorney general must have engaged in the “active practice” of law for 10 years in the state.

The statute doesn’t define what “active practice” means — and Bysiewicz went to court for a judge’s ruling to clarify the question. Sheldon never said exactly what “active practice” means in his 93-page ruling, but at the end of it he wrote that “the plaintiff, as a Connecticut attorney-at-law since 1986 who performed the … duties of her office as Connecticut’s Secretary of the State since 1999, has engaged in active practice at the bar of this state, within the meaning of [the statute], for at least 10 years.”

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CT: Fiery End to Democrat’s AG Trial

From Courant.com:

In a quarrelsome end to an extraordinary trial, the lawyer for the Republican Party said Thursday that a judge should throw out the lawsuit in which Secretary of the State Susan Bysiewicz seeks a ruling that she is eligible to run for attorney general.

“Waah, waah, waah! I want to be attorney general, and I’m going to get my way in court!” is how the GOP’s lawyer, Eliot Gersten, characterized Bysiewicz’s stance as plaintiff in her lawsuit against her own office and the Democratic Party. She wants the party to nominate her for attorney general at its convention May 22.

Gersten’s comment touched off an animated finale to lawyers’ arguments in the trial at Superior Court in Hartford that began April 14. The judge, Michael Sheldon, said that he would work with “all deliberate speed” toward a decision but that it would not come this week.


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CT: Democrat Secretary of State – Unfit for AG?

From ctpost.com:

Regardless of any court ruling in her case, Susan Bysiewicz has demonstrated her unfitness for the office of Connecticut Attorney General.

It became clear during three full days of testimony and argument that while Bysiewicz, a lawyer, may have managed a coolly efficient office as secretary of the state, she has not been engaged in the “active practice” of law as required by state statute for those who would serve as attorney general.

Though she’s a lawyer and was in active practice for more than five years before becoming secretary of the state 11 years ago, that doesn’t meet the statutory requirement of at least 10 years active practice.

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